Anti-Trump Protests Stretch Into Fifth Day

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Protesters remained vocal Sunday about the election of Donald Trump as cities such as Washington and San Francisco braced for more public demonstrations.

Thousands of anti-Donald Trump protesters, including many pro-immigrant groups, hold a demonstration along 5th Avenue as New Yorkers react to the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States on Nov. 13, 2016 in New York City. (Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

In Manhattan, a group gathered to demonstrate against Trump’s immigration policies.

“The main purpose is to tell Donald Trump he can’t just deport 11 million undocumented people,” Noelle Yasso said. “They’re here to stay and we stand in solidarity with them.”

Yasso, who said she was an immigration lawyer, said immigrants are terrified.

“They’re saying, ‘Are we going to be deported tomorrow?’ ” she said. “People don’t know what will happen and they’re very scared.”

In Los Angeles, around 100 people peacefully protested in front of the CNN building, said a member of CNN security. A small protest also took place midday Sunday in Springfield, Massachusetts.

This is the fifth day of protests since Trump upset Hillary Clinton in the US presidential election. Protesters are upset about Trump’s policies on the environment, LGBT rights and other issues. Some are questioning the legitimacy of Trump’s victory by noting that although he took the Electoral College, Clinton won the popular vote.

On Saturday, 8,000 people took to the streets in Los Angeles. The march was peaceful, unlike a Friday night protest by 1,000 people that resulted in the arrests of 187 adults and eight juveniles, Los Angeles police said.

Violence also flared again Saturday night in Portland, Oregon. Seventy-one people were arrested, mostly on charges of disorderly conduct and interfering with a police officer, police said.

“Several times throughout the evening, projectiles such as road flares and bottles were thrown at police officers,” police said.

An additional 17 people were arrested Friday night. On that night, a man was shot and wounded during a protest in which demonstrators threw projectiles at police. On Thursday night, protesters smashed business windows and vandalized a car dealership.

New York protests

In New York, thousands of people marched 2 miles on Saturday and gathered outside Trump Tower, the President-elect’s home in Manhattan, where they chanted and proclaimed that he was “not my president.”

“I don’t know what we can actually do to change things,” protester Allen Meisner told CNN on Saturday, “but we have to keep coming and making sure his hatred and his fear and the anger that he’s stirring up and using to get elected doesn’t manifest itself in our country.”

By 8 p.m. ET, only a few dozen protesters remained and Fifth Avenue was open for traffic. Police said a few people were arrested Saturday but that the protest was largely peaceful.

Three young women participated the rally from Mac Arthur Park to downtown Los Angeles on Nov. 12, 2016. (Credit: KTLA)

‘Thank you for the unity’

In Los Angeles, police tweeted around midday that about 8,000 people were “exercising their 1st Amendment Right. No arrests have been made.”

The Los Angeles Times reported it was the largest anti-Trump rally in the city so far.

At 2:56 p.m. (5:56 p.m. ET), police tweeted that 1,100 people were protesting.

“Thank you for the unity,” the tweet said.

In Indianapolis, two police officers were injured by protesters throwing rocks Saturday evening, according to a tweet from the Indianapolis Metro Police Department’s official account.

Seven people were arrested as police tried to keep peace in downtown Indianapolis.

Protests also were staged in Chicago; Washington; Dayton, Ohio; Cincinnati; Oklahoma City; Salt Lake City; Providence, Rhode Island; and Las Vegas. Some cities that had marches on Friday night, such as Atlanta, were quiet Saturday.

Shooting in Portland

Protests in Portland, Oregon, turned violent as demonstrators threw bottles and projectiles at police, and attacked a film crew, police said. Portland Police arrested 71 people on Saturday night for “failing to obey numerous lawful orders to vacate city streets,” police said.

They were blocking the city’s light rail service and restricting traffic flow, police said. Officers were attempting to disperse the protesters using a “diversionary bang device” after warning them to leave the street.

Thousands of anti-Donald Trump protesters, including many pro-immigrant groups, hold a demonstration along 5th Avenue as New Yorkers react to the election of Donald Trump as President of the United States on Nov. 13, 2016 in New York City. (Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

A man was shot early Saturday on the Morrison Bridge during a protest march. The suspect was believed to be in a vehicle on the bridge when a confrontation unfolded with a member of the crowd, Portland police said. The suspect got out of the vehicle and fired multiple shots before fleeing.

The victim’s injuries were not life-threatening, and he was treated at a hospital.

Two 18-year-old men were arrested and charged with attempted murder and unlawful use of a weapon, police said. Seventeen people were arrested in Friday night’s protests, police said.

Portland has been the site of the most violent anti-Trump demonstrations. Thursday night, a small group broke away and smashed the windows of businesses and a number of vehicles at an auto dealership.

Police began tweeting photos of protesters on Saturday and asking people to identify them so arrests can be made.

On Sunday the protesters struck a different tone. They gathered for a peaceful vigil on Portland’s waterfront at the Salmon Street Springs Fountain.

Sunday’s gathering was held to recognize the victim of the Morrison Bridge shooting, those arrested during the peaceful protests, and for any who have “experienced violence for simply living their lives,” protest organizers told KATU.

“I think violence detracts from our message on both sides, and same with destruction, but I think we need to think about why those people are being destructive, not just condemn it,” a spokesperson for Portland’s Resistance, Gregory McKelvey, told KATU.